But the letter — one of 7,500 pages released Friday by the Clinton Presidential Library — was never sent.

Also released by the library was a 1993 document in which a staffer rants about a Moscow Radisson hotel, fearing a press mutiny on a planned visit that would exacerbate Clinton’s “not swell” press relations.

“I really need you two to . . . decide whether this damn hotel is worth the aggravation,” the staffer wrote.

Even the 1998 White House Easter Egg Roll was a source of debate as aides wondered whether they should invite kids to send e-mail messages to the president.

“I’m against any encouragement to send e-mail from any public event,” vented aide Stephen Horn. “Especially an Easter event, a religious celebration.”